Ullmann Sodium Chloride
Ullmann Sodium Chloride
Ullmann Sodium Chloride
Sodium Chloride
GISBERT WESTPHAL, Solvay Salz GmbH, Solingen, Federal
GERHARD KRISTEN, Solvay Salz GmbH, Solingen, Federal
WILHELM WEGENER, Sudwestdeutsche Salzwerke AG, Heilbronn, Germany
PETER AMBATIELLO, Salzbergwerk Berchtesgaden, Germany
HELMUT GEYER, Salzgewinnungsgesellschaft Westfalen mbH, Ahaus, Germany
BERNARD EPRON, Compagnie des Salins du Midi et des Salines de lEst, Paris, France
CHRISTIAN BONAL, Compagnie des Salins du Midi et des Salines de lEst, Paris, France
sterreichischen Universitaten, Vienna
GEORG STEINHAUSER, Atominstitut der O
University of Technology, Austria
FRANZ GoTZFRIED, Sudsalz GmbH, Heilbronn, Germany
1.
2.
3.
4.
4.1.
4.1.1.
4.1.2.
4.1.3.
4.1.4.
4.2.
4.2.1.
4.2.2.
4.2.2.1.
4.2.2.2.
4.2.2.3.
4.2.2.4.
4.2.2.5.
4.2.2.6.
4.2.3.
4.3.
4.3.1.
4.3.2.
4.3.3.
4.3.4.
4.3.5.
History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Formation and Occurrence of
Salt Deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mining of Rock Salt from Underground
and Surface Deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mining by Drilling and Blasting. . . . . . . .
Continuous Mining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Upgrading of Rock Salt . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Utilization of the Chambers . . . . . . . . . . .
Brine Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Natural Brine Extraction . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Solution Mining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Drilling and Construction of the Borehole.
The Process of Solution Mining . . . . . . . .
Planning of the Extraction Process . . . . . .
Other Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Storage Caverns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Combined Dry and Solution Mining . . . . .
Vacuum Salt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Brine Purification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Open-Pan Evaporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Multiple-Effect Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mechanical Vapor Recompression (MVR)
Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Recrystallization Process . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. 319
. 320
. 322
. 324
. .324
. .325
. .327
. .327
. .329
. .330
. .330
. .330
. .331
. .331
. .332
. .332
. .333
. .333
. .334
. .335
. .336
. .340
. .340
4.4.
4.4.1.
4.4.1.1.
4.4.1.2.
4.4.2.
4.4.3.
4.4.4.
5.
6.
7.
7.1.
7.2.
7.3.
7.4.
7.5.
7.6.
8.
9.
10.
11.
. .341
. .342
1. History [17]
In the Odyssey, HOMER wrote: travel . . . until
you meet mortals who do not know the sea and
who never eat food seasoned with salt. Elsewhere he refers to salt as holy. JUSTUS VON
2012 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
DOI: 10.1002/14356007.a24_317.pub4
4.3.6.
4.3.7.
4.3.8.
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2. Properties [8]
Sodium chloride, NaCl, Mr 58.443, is a colorless
salt with good solubility in water. Chemically
pure NaCl crystallizes from aqueous solutions in
well-formed cubes, which under the influence of
surface tension often grow together into funnelshaped, hollow, square-based pyramids. In the
presence of impurities, octahedra or dodecahedra
are sometimes formed. Crystallization from
hydrochloric acid solution gives long, fibrous,
needle-shaped crystals.
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During crystallization, small amounts of water can be trapped in holes in the crystals. When
this vaporizes on heating, it causes the crystals to
explode with audible decrepitation. In salt from
natural deposits, inclusions of gases such as
methane, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide
can occur.
In the crystal, the Na and Cl ions alternate. The
ions of each type form a face-centered cubic
lattice, in which each ion is surrounded octahedrally by six ions of the other type at a distance of
a/2 (lattice constant a 0.56273 nm). The modulus of elasticity perpendicular to the surface of
the cube is 41 074 MPa. Under high pressure,
slow flow takes place. Sodium chloride is highly
transparent to light of wavelength between
200 nm (ultraviolet) and 15 mm (infrared). Ionizing radiation causes lattice defects (color centers) which give the salt a blue color. On heating
to ca. 250 C, this color disappears.
Some important physical properties are listed
below and also in Tables 13.
Melting point
Boiling point
Density at 25 C
Mohs hardness
Brinell hardness
Dielectric constant
Refractive index n20
D
Electrical resistivity at 20 C
Electrical resistivity at 100 C
Thermal conductivity at 17 C
Linear coefficient of expansion
Specific heat capacity at 25 C
Enthalpy of formation at 25 C
Entropy at 25 C
Latent heat of fusion
Latent heat of evaporation
Viscosity of saturated aqueous
solution
Density of molten NaCl at 801 C
Viscosity of molten NaCl at 850 C
Surface tension of molten NaCl
at 850 C
Electrical conductivity of molten NaCl
at 850 C
801 C
1465 C
2.1615 g/cm3
2 2.5
14 HB
5.9
1.5443
4.61016 W cm
1.381013 W cm
0.072 W cm1 K1
40.5 mm m1 K1
850 J kg1 K1
410.9 kJ/mol
72.36 J mol1 K1
0.52 kJ/g
2.91 kJ/g
1.93 mPa s
1.549 g/cm3
1.29 mPa s
110 mN/m
3.7 S/cm
Temperature,
C
0
20
40
60
80
100
180
g NaCl/100 g
H2O
NaCl,
wt %
35.76
35.92
36.46
37.16
37.99
39.12
44.9
26.34
26.43
26.71
27.09
27.53
28.12
30.99
Density of
solution,
g/cm3
NaCl content
of solution,
g/L
1.2093
1.1999
1.1914
1.1830
1.1745
1.1660
318.5
317.1
318.2
320.5
323.3
327.9
0 C
20 C
40 C
60 C
80 C
4
8
12
16
20
24
1.03038
1.06121
1.09244
1.12419
1.15663
1.18999
1.02680
1.05589
1.08566
1.11621
1.14779
1.18040
1.01977
1.04798
1.07699
1.10688
1.13774
1.16971
1.0103
1.0381
1.0667
1.0962
1.1268
1.1584
0.9988
1.0264
1.0549
1.0842
1.1146
1.1463
decompose into solid sodium chloride and saturated brine at 0.15 C. Below this temperature it
is the stable solid phase. However, it crystallizes
so slowly that, on rapid cooling, the phase diagram follows the broken curve in Figure 1. The
metastable eutectic point reached is ca. 1.3 K
below the true cryohydric point at 21.12 C.
Its property of depressing the freezing point of
water enables sodium chloride to be used in
freezing mixtures and as a deicing salt. The
crystals of NaCl 2 H2O, although similar to ice
in appearance, are birefringent and account for
freezing of moist stockpiles of highway de-icing
salt during storage in cold weather.
321
0
20
40
60
80
100
5%
10 %
15 %
20 %
25 %
0.59
2.26
7.13
19.26
45.75
97.89
0.57
2.18
6.88
18.58
44.16
94.43
0.55
2.09
6.58
17.78
42.49
90.44
0.51
1.97
6.20
16.76
39.97
85.52
0.47
1.81
5.72
15.53
37.09
79.67
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Table 4. Solubility of oxygen in aqueous sodium chloride solutions
(25 C, 133 kPa)
c(NaCl), mol/L
O2 solubility, cm3/L
0.0
0.125
0.25
0.5
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.78
5.52
5.30
4.92
4.20
3.05
2.24
1.62
25 C and 133 kPa. The greatly decreased solubility of oxygen in strong brines explains why the
interior surfaces of steel tanks holding saturated
brine are comparatively free from corrosion
below the liquid level.
Crystalline NaCl has a very low conductance,
but the fused salt is an excellent conductor
(Table 5). The conductivity increases almost as
a linear function of temperature at moderate
temperatures. Impurities may promote abnormally high conductivity. The conductivity is
considerably higher than in aqueous solution: a
conductivity of 5 S/m corresponds to a salinity of
35 g/kg at about 23 C. The mean conductivity
of the oceans (excluding the shallow seas) is
3.27 S/m. Measurement of electrical conductivity is usually applied in brines only in a concentration range near to or below that of seawater.
The electrical conductivity of strong brines is so
high that sensitivity is lost. Electrical salinity
indicators are used for monitoring boiler water
and condenser systems, and to warn of entry of
salts into fresh water systems.
s, S/m
800
850
900
1000
1100
3.58
3.75
3.90
4.17
4.39
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.
.
.
.
.
.
Sodium Chloride
323
324
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territories.
4. Production
4.1. Mining of Rock Salt from
Underground and Surface Deposits
Rock salt has been mined in Europe for 3000
years. A salt deposit near ground level in the
Eastern Alps was developed by tunneling and
worked by excavation around 1000 B.C.
Salt-bearing regions are revealed by the presence of surface springs of saline water, and these
were the areas where the possibility of mining
was always investigated by sinking shafts. The
main precondition for success is the presence of
dry overlying rock, and it was this circumstance
that enabled the first German salt mine to be
opened in 1825 near Schwabisch Hall. In other
parts of Europe, salt was mined long before this,
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325
326
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327
328
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329
Nonexplosive
Nonradioactive
Not spontaneous combustible
No generation of toxic or explosive gases
No reactions between the wastes or with the
rock salt
No spreading of diseases
No penetrating odor
Sufficient stability
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331
332
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333
334
Sodium Chloride
under a constant load. For the first filling operation with gas, a brine extraction pipe is lowered to
the bottom of the cavern. The gas in the annular
space between the protective pipe and the vertical
central pipe is compressed to a high pressure, and
displaces the brine from the cavern until the latter
is completely empty. The gas storage system
operates by the principle of compressiondecompression. The gas in the cavern required to maintain the minimum residual pressure required for
stability of the cavern is called the cushion gas,
but when it is filled up to its maximum operating
pressure, it is known as the working gas.
To meet peak electrical demand, air is compressed using cheap electricity and stored in a salt
cavern. Later air is expanded through a gas
turbine coupled to an electric generator to produce high-value, peak electricity. Before expansion, the air is heated in a compression chamber
using natural gas or diesel oil as fuel. The compressed-air energy-storage facility at Huntorf in
Germany, which has been in operation since
1979, has the following characteristics [39]:
.
.
.
.
Salt caverns have been used for several decades to store various hydrocarbon products. More
recently, the use of salt caverns for disposal of
oil-field wastes has received increased attention.
In the early 1990s, several Texas brine companies obtained permits to receive oil-field wastes,
much of which was drilling waste [40].
Descriptions of cavern storage systems can be
found in [4144]. A worldwide information exchange service is provided by the Solution Mining Research Institute (SMRI) [45].
4.2.3. Combined Dry and Solution Mining
Water flushing (intermittent or continuous dissolution in chambers) is the extraction process
usually used in the alpine salt deposits in
Germany and Austria. Tunnels, shafts, and chambers are usually first produced by mining techniques. A single worked stratum is divided into
separate districts of a given size in which several
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336
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NaCl
KCl
K2SO4
MgCl2
MgSO4
CaCl2
CaSO4
Na2SO4
NaNO3
Insolubles
Water
*
Bad Ischl,
Austria
[48]
Drang, Mandi
District,
India [49]
Fairport,
Ohio,
USA [50]
Huitrin,
Argentina
[51]
Khanguet
el Melah,
Algeria [51]
Lyons,
Kansas,
USA [50]
Pugwash,
Nova Scotia,
Canada [52]
Stassfurt,
Germany
[53]
97.00
69.50
97.26
99.27
97.80
95.94
94.5
0.02
92.4
0.05
0.08
0.04
0.02
0.02
2.2
0.01
0.04
0.004
0.070
0.10
0.59
*
1.60
0.54
0.16
28.70
1.18**
0.3
0.15
0.03
0.05
0.09
0.44
0.680
0.01
2.06
3.0
7.4
1.68
0.18
2.2
0.2
0.07
0.14
0.003
0.830
0.612
**
In an evaporative crystallizer, the salt normally crystallizes at 40150 C, whereby the solubility of sodium chloride increasing only slightly
with temperature (see Table 1).
Brine is generally obtained by dissolving
crude salt that contains many impurities. The
production of high-purity salt requires chemical
purification of the brine. The high purity is the
major difference to rock salt (see Table 6).
Purification is also necessary to avoid scale
formation in the heat exchangers and the evaporation equipment. Additionally, the use of pure
Figure 7. Processes for the production of crystallized salt based on rock salt deposits
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industry, pharmaceutical uses, and water treatment. Magnesium and calcium ions must be
removed from the saturated brine to avoid scale
formation and also impurities such as hygroscopic magnesium chloride in solid sodium chloride.
The most common and most problematic
impurities in crude salt are the sulfates, chlorides,
and, to some extent, the carbonates of calcium
and magnesium, as well as the triple salt polyhalite (K2SO4 2 CaSO4 MgSO4 2 H2O). In
addition the water which is used for dissolving
rock salt contributes to the content of impurities
in the crude brine. Most of the magnesium compounds are very soluble in crude brine. Furthermore, the crude brine is saturated with calcium
sulfate in many cases. Sodium chloride brine
significantly enhances the solubility of calcium
sulfate [54]. This effect is called salting-in.
The principal impurities of crude brine are
therefore calcium, magnesium, and sulfate ions,
but also strontium ions (usually dissolved in
relatively low concentrations in crude brine; see
Table 7), all of which take part in scale formation.
Potassium ions are irrelevant for the formation of
incrustations in the evaporation equipment due to
their high solubility. They only play a role as
impurities in the final high-purity product [55].
The following chemical methods are used to
purify crude brine.
Purification with Lime or Caustic Soda and
Soda Ash. Traditional brine purification is
337
Table 7. Compositions of crude and purified brine, and mother liquor (in g/L, unless otherwise noted)
Mixed crude
brine from three
Austrian mines [56]
Na
K
Mg2
Ca2
Sr2
Ba2
Fe2 and Fe3
Cl
Br
I
F
SO4 2
HCO3
CO3 2
*
Crude brine,
Bernburg, Germany,
values calculated
from [53]
117.82
2.487
1.500
0.809
0.025
125.52
0.57
0.05
1.53
183.24
0.065
191.08
8.69
0.102
3.66
Mother liquor,
Ebensee,
Austria [56]
Max. limits
for ultrapurified brine
for membrane chlor-alkali
electrolysis [57]
120.85
46.26
0.0002
0.005*
0.004*
**
**
< 400 ppb
< 500 ppb
1 ppm
189.97
50.24
1.02
Concentrations at 14 C.
The combined concentration of Mg2 and Ca2 must be < 20 ppb.
**
Some analyses
of purified brine
[55]
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others SO2
4 , K , and Br . Further concentration
of this mother liquor by evaporation results in the
precipitation of both NaCl and Na2SO4, and a
more strongly concentrated mother liquor with
respect to both K and Br remains. This concentrated mother liquor is drained off. The
Na2SO4 is dissolved in brine and then returned
to the brine purification process, thereby lowering both the K and Br levels in the purified
brine. As a consequence the contents of both K
and Br of the NaCl of the first evaporator steps
are reduced. From crude brine containing 50 mg/
L Br, a low-bromide salt with 27 mg/kg Br
can obtained which is highly suitable for the
production of chlorine. One-fifth of the total salt
production occurs in the mother liquor concentrator. This second salt stream contains 247 mg/
kg Brand has to be used for other purposes like
road de-icing [59, 60].
Nanofiltration. In chlor-alkali plants nanofiltration (NF) of brine has been known since
1996 [61]. Nanofiltration removes sulfate as a
small-volume, high-concentration stream and
can reduce direct purge volumes by as much as
95%, or can eliminate the handling of toxic and
expensive barium compounds and disposal of
sulfate-containing solid waste.
Sulfate removal is based on selective filtration
of brine through a NF membrane under high
pressure. The NF membrane has charged groups
that selectively reject multivalent anions such as
SO2
4 , while allowing monovalent ionic species
such as Cl from the feed solution to pass
through.
The NF membrane process has great potential
for improvements in producing high-grade vacuum salt. The use of a NF separation unit to
recover the sulfates with a reduced content of K
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339
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341
Color
Fig
Figure 8. Multiple-effect evaporation (Source: Evatherm AG, Othmarsingen/CH) a) Crystallizers; b) Preheaters; c) Slurry
tank; d) Centrifuges
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Color
Fig
Figure 9. Mechanical vapor recompression (Source: Evatherm AG, Othmarsingen/CH) a) Crystallizer; b) Compressor;
c) Scrubber; d) Heat exchanger; e) Slurry tank; f) Centrifuge; g) Preheaters; h) Balance tank
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343
Color
Fig
Figure 10. Recrystallization process (Source: Evatherm AG, Othmarsingen/CH) a) Dissolvers; b) Preheaters; c) Clarifier;
d) Crystallizers; e) Cold brine tank; f) Centrifuge; g) Slurry tank
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Table 8. Typical dried vacuum salt qualitiesa
Process
Multiple-effectb
MVRb
Recrystallizer
99.97
0.05
99.97
0.05
99.98
0.05
0.10.3
0.10.3
0.10.3
510
0.5
100 (max.
1000)
50 (max.
250)
250
10
510
0.5
100 (max.
1000)
50 (max.
250)
250
10
40
0.5
20
Bromidec, ppm
Sulfate, ppm
Insolubles, ppm
15
90
< 10
Unwashed.
With Schweizerhalle brine treatment.
c
Depending on raw brine or raw salt quality.
b
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345
Energy
750 kg/t
25 kWh/t
1000 kg/h (for startup)
155 kWh/t
450 kg/t
45 kWh/t
Evaporation in open pans produces the largest, hollow, pyramidal crystals with an edge
length of up to 24 mm.
Saline solutions and moist, saline air lead to
considerable corrosion damage in salt works if
unsuitable materials are used. Corrosion is
strongly dependent on temperature, pH, and the
oxygen content of the brine. The evaporator
bodies are mostly manufactured from Monel or
Monel-plated steel. Also evaporators made of
titanium, Inconel 625, Duplex steel, and rubberlined steel are in use. The tube plates of
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347
Annual evaporation *,
mm
Annual rainfall, mm
*
South of
France
Australia
Indonesia
Taiwan
1700
3600
1850
1660
550
300
1300
1400
Fresh water.
NaCl
MgCl2
MgSO4
CaSO4
KCl
77
10
6
3.9
2
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Low salinity ponds: micro-algae, bacteria, protozoa, fish, mangroves, sea grasses, seaweeds
Intermediate salinity ponds: Artemia salina,
brine fly larvae
High salinity ponds: Dunaliella salina, red
halophilic bacteria
various organisms, and reduces the permeability of the bottom of the ponds, thus minimizing
brine losses.
It colors the brines in the crystallizers red and
thus maximizes the evaporation rate by maximizing the rate of solar energy absorption and
eliminating reflection of solar radiation from
the colorless salt bed. The red color of the
brines in the crystallizers is due to Halobacterium and to the monocellular seaweed Dunaliella salina.
Finally, it creates and maintains appropriate
conditions in the evaporation ponds and crystallizers for continuous and maximal production of high-quality salt, which is characterized
by clear, compact, and mainly thick granules,
low in Ca2 (0.030.06%), Mg2 (0.0030.05
%), SO2
4 (0.101.2%), and admixtures of soil
(0.010.02%).
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349
Figure 15. Modern salt field [86] a) Sea water intake; b) Pumping station; c) Dikes; d) Condensers; e) Brine storage tanks;
f ) Crystallizers; g) Bitterns area; h) Washing plant; i) Salt storage areas; j) Packaging plant; k) Dispatch
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Solar Salt Quality. It has been widely recognized in the salt community that healthy biological systems in solar salt works lead to higher
salt production and better salt quality.
In solar salt works, salt is harvested from
crystallizing ponds as mixture of salt crystals
and mother liquor (bitterns) containing soluble
impurities in high concentrations. During outdoor storage, the content of soluble impurities is
reduced, until it becomes constant after six
months. This phenomenon is known as natural
purification.
The washing process immediately after harvesting ensures high salt quality, as it minimizes
the impurity levels and moisture content. The
design of the wash plant and location of the salt
stockpiles have an important bearing on the
quality of the end product. Proper salt washing
improves the color of the salt and removes some
impurities, both soluble and insoluble. In one
such method, the crude salt is fed into an agitated
tank where it is mixed with saturated brine from
the crystallizers to form a slurry, which is
pumped into a screw classifier. The wash liquor
overflows. The salt then passes through a dewatering screen for further removal of impurities.
Hydromilling selectively ruptures the salt crystals in which the impurities are embedded so that
they become exposed to purification [92].
In Mexico a unique process for refining salt
was developed [93]. By redissolving high-quality solar salt and using a salting out process to
precipitate out trace amounts of calcium, magnesium, and sulfate, it is possible to produce a
solar sea salt exceeding 99% purity.
The best solar salt qualities achieve 99.80%
NaCl content (Table 11).
Table 11. Typical solar salt qualities
Component
NaCl (dry basis), %
Moisture, %
Calcium, %
Magnesium, %
Potassium, %
Sulfate, %
Iodine, ppm
Insolubles, %
*
Guerrero Negro,
Mexico
(unwashed grade)
[94]
Port Hedland,
Australia
(washed grade)
[95]
98.54*
99.7099.80
1.802.80
0.030.05
0.020.03
0.010.02
0.100.15
< 0.5
0.010.03
0.16
0.20
0.68
0.07
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Byproducts. In most commercial operations, the bittern often is disposed in the sea.
Where bitterns are present in sufficiently large
quantities, an adequate market exists and if
the climate allows, the bitterns can be concentrated on a bittern salt field to extract the
magnesium bromide, magnesium sulfate, and
even magnesium chloride (! Magnesium Compounds) [96, 97].
When the salt concentration in the salt
marshes reaches 50 g/L, Artemia salina (brine
shrimp) starts to develop. This tiny crustacean,
measuring just a few tenths of a millimeter,
reaches an adult size of 1 cm and weighs approximately 2 mg. Artemia is an important source of
food for fish and crustaceans. Rich in proteins,
polyunsaturated fatty acids, vitamins, and carotenoids, it is suitable for fresh and seawater
aquarium fish. Artemia is also the main source
of food for larvae and adult fish and crustaceans
bred in fish farms. In some salt works, like
Aigues-Mortes in France, Artemia salina is bred
as a secondary activity to salt extraction.
4.4.2. Crystallization from Mined Brine
The salinity of brines from solution mining is
much higher than that of seawater. In consequence there is no need for ponds in which the
brine is concentrated.
The composition of underground brines varies
widely. In certain inland underground brines,
potassium and magnesium salts are absent and
calcium sulfate is the only constituent other than
sodium chloride. In such cases an 8 m deep brine
pond is used for intermediate brine storage before
entering the crystallization ponds. During sixmonth intermediate storage gypsum precipitates
from the brine.
One large solar salt production, which starts
from mined brine, is located in Torrevieja in
Spain. The saturated brine is pumped via a 52 km
pipe from the Cabeza de Pinoso salt deposit to the
1400 ha solar lagoon at the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Salt is obtained by evaporating the
water of the brine by the combined action of solar
radiation and wind. The estimated annual solar
salt production is 200250 kg/m2.
Some 120 000 t/a of pure NaCl is being produced at Sales Monzon in Spain by utilizing the
residual heat from production of 17 MW of
Sodium Chloride
351
electricity with gas turbines. By using the residual heat from co-generation the brine from solution mining caverns is heated to ca. 80 C before
entering the crystallization ponds. The evaporation rate at that temperature is ten times higher
than at 30 C. As a result, the ponds required are
much smaller than solar evaporation ponds and
the salt layer is much thicker [98].
4.4.3. Extraction from Salt Lakes
Evaporation of saline waters over geological
time has resulted in terminal lakes of saline
waters in many countries of the world. In these
deposits, concentrations of the salts are much
higher than in seawater and the recovery of a
range of salts from salt lakes and their processing
to other products is carried out in commercial
operations.
The Great Salt Lake in Utah has a NaCl
content of 15.11%. It does not contain any bromide, unlike seawater, and the content of
Glaubers salt is higher than that of magnesium
sulfate. The NaCl concentration in the Dead Sea
is 7.93% (Table 12).
Products from lakes such as the Dead Sea, the
Salar de Atacama, and the Great Salt Lake, in
addition to halite, include magnesium and potassium salts, bromine, iodine, and boron, lithium,
and nitrate salts. These salts, including halite, are
converted to a number of other chemicals. The
production of salt from salt lakes occurs in
Seawater
Great
Salt Lake
Dead
Sea
Salar de
Atacama
Sodium
Potassium
Magnesium
Calcium
Sulfate
Chloride
Bicarbonate
Bromide
Boron
Lithium
Total
SG**
10.56
0.38
1.27
0.40
2.65
18.98
0.14
65 103
4.6 103
0.17 103
34.38
1.021.04
80.1
5.22
5.19
NR*
18.74
139.12
NR
NR
NR
NR
248.37
1.164
39.15
7.26
39.15
16.86
0.47
212.40
0.22
5.12
40 103
18 103
320.63
1.220
93.18
21.95
12.26
0.30
23.29
192.0
NR
NR
0.84
1.96
345.78
1.226
Not reported.
Ratio of the weight of the liquor to that of an equal volume of
water at 4 C.
**
352
Sodium Chloride
Vol. 33
5. Salt Standards
Salt produced worldwide normally varies in purity from 90% NaCl for rock salt to 99.99% for
vacuum salt. Vacuum salt made from purified
brine or by recrystallization generally has the
highest purity, and rock salt the lowest. Several
mandatory and voluntary standards apply to salt
to ensure appropriate quality, purity, and gradation for particular salt uses (Table 13).
The important Codex Alimentarius Standard
for food-grade salt applies to salt used as an ingredient of food, both for direct sale to the consumer
and for food processing. Essential quality factors
are the content of NaCl, which must not be less
than 97% on a dry matter basis, exclusion of
additives, and maximum limits for contaminants.
6. Analytical Methods
Sampling is just as important as the analysis
itself. Particularly in bulk salt where during
Title
Designation
Jurisdiction
Food
Deicing
Stan 150
Food Chemicals
Codex (FCC)
ASTM-D-632
AASHTO-M-143
Technische Lieferbedingungen
fur Streustoffe
Specification for Salt for Spreading
on Highways
for Winter Maintenance
Chlorure de sodium solide utilise
comme fondant routier
Pharmaceutical
Water treatment
TL-Streu
BS 3247
NF P98-180
Ph. Eur.
U.S.P.
JP
ANSI/AWWA
B200
EN 973
EN 14805
Vol. 33
Sodium Chloride
353
Analytical method
Designation
ISO 2483
ISO 2479
ISO 2480
ISO 2481
ISO 2482
STAN 150
ASTM E534
AOAC 925.55
Cations:
EuSalt/AS 01-18
7. Uses
Salt has more than 14 000 known uses. The salt
industry generally classifies salt uses by the five
principal use categories and then lumps the remaining uses in the miscellaneous classification:
Table salt and food processing, agriculture, water
treatment, chemical, anti-icing and de-icing, and
miscellaneous [70].
354
Sodium Chloride
Vol. 33
1525
30
Fluoride, ppm
250
212.5287.5
100
Iron, ppm
8501100
Vol. 33
7.2. Agriculture
The mineral sodium is a vital element for animals, just as for humans. Sodium is involved, like
potassium and chloride, mainly in physiological
functions. It is needed particularly for maintaining the osmotic pressure of the body liquids and
for the acidbase-balance. Chloride is involved
in enzymatic reactions as a cofactor of a-amylase
in the pancreas. Chloride ions are needed further
for the formation of the hydrochloric acid in the
stomach. Most forage provides insufficient sodium for animal feeding and may lack adequate
chloride. Therefore, salt supplementation is a
necessary and critical part of a nutritionally
balanced diet for animals.
Salt can be mixed with commercially feed or
fed free-choice. It is produced plain or as trace
mineralized salt, in blocks, and as loose salt. Salt
acts as an excellent carrier for trace elements and
vitamins not found in the vegetation consumed
by grazing livestock. Some of the salt additives
are zinc, manganese, copper, iodine, cobalt, selenium, and vitamins such as A and D. Magnesium, calcium, phosphorus, and sulfur are frequently added to salt blocks for free-choice
feeding as well.
Sodium Chloride
355
356
Sodium Chloride
Vol. 33
Vol. 33
Sodium Chloride
357
quent water evaporation due to changes in temperature or air humidity causes recrystallization
of the brine film and the crystals bond together.
Also the presence of small quantities of brine
included in the crystals can contribute to caking.
Especially evaporated salt that exits the salt dryer
at higher temperatures tends to undergo increased caking during cooling in silos. To prevent caking, free-flow additives or anticaking
agents are added to salt.
Water-insoluble adsorbents such as calcium
carbonate, magnesium carbonate, magnesium
hydroxide carbonate, tricalcium phosphate, calcium silicate, and silicon dioxide are used as
free-flow additives. These additives are finely
distributed in concentrations of 0.13% in the
salt. Free-flow additives are not suitable for every
application since they become suspended in solution, for example, in a saline solution for
vegetable preservation. In deicing salt free-flow
additives would delay the start of the melting
process.
Most effective are water-soluble crystal modifiers such as yellow prussiate of soda (YPS,
sodium ferrocyanide decahydrate). These are
sprayed as aqueous solutions onto the salt. In
general 220 ppm of YPS is sufficient to prevent
caking. For deicing salts which are stored for a
longer time under changing weather conditions,
YPS and Prussian blue (ferric ferrocyanide) are
most commonly added. Concentrations of YPS
and Prussian blue in deicing salt vary, typically in
the range of 20100 ppm.
Alternatives to ferrocyanides include mesotartrate derivatives, for example, an iron complex
of meso-tartaric acid, which is used with an
approximate concentration of < 40 ppm on salt
[113].
9. Health Aspects
Sodium chloride is an essential nutrient for the
normal functioning of the body. It is important
for nerve conduction, muscle contraction, correct
osmotic balance of extracellular fluid, and
absorption of other nutrients.
Sodium, together with potassium, is an essential mineral for regulating body fluid balance.
Sodium is the most abundant cation in the
extracellular fluid, and sodium salts account for
more than 90% of the osmotically active solute in
358
Sodium Chloride
Vol. 33
Vol. 33
Sodium Chloride
359
360
Sodium Chloride
Vol. 33
Color
Fig
Figure 17. Energy consumption for production and distribution of spreading materials on 1000 km (4 km2) of road
[136]
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008e
Albania
Austria
Belarus
Bosnia
Bulgaria
Croatia
Denmark
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Iceland
Italy
Netherlands
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Switzerland
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Europe total
20
641
437
325
1 700
34
587
6 823
30
15 054
245
4
3 933
5 564
3 493
659
2 308
3 170
42
122
99
3 869
452
2 116
2 287
5 800
59 814
23
643
1 369
400
1 800
30
590
7 894
30
15 633
126
5
3 943
5 773
3 558
645
2 258
2 800
17
97
128
3 893
400
2 197
2 300
5 700
62 252
25
747
1 883
260
1 900
33
600
7 612
30
18 696
188
5
3 476
5 896
4 150
737
2 398
2 800
33
122
125
3 944
486
2 158
4 393
5 800
68 497
50
750
1 900
260
1 900
40
600
8 448
30
17 470
200
5
3 500
5 900
4 000
750
2 400
2 800
40
110
120
3 850
575
1 750
4 800
5 800
68 048
50
850
1 900
260
1 900
40
600
7 800
30
16 000
200
5
3 500
5 900
4 000
750
2 400
2 800
40
100
125
3 850
420
1 750
4 800
5 800
65 870
Vol. 33
Sodium Chloride
361
2000
2002
2004
2006
Asia
Europe
North America
South America
Oceania
Africa
Middle East
Central America
World total
58 370
59 814
66 614
13 654
8 977
4 024
3 122
2 044
216 619
61 459
62 252
60 843
11 943
10 092
4 766
2 994
2 173
216 522
60 130
68 497
68 696
14 178
11 182
5 487
3 118
2 380
233 668
77 963
68 048
68 838
16 367
12 490
5 455
3 131
2 396
254 688
Table 18. Global consumption of sodium chloride in major application areas in 2008 and forecast for 2013 (in 106 t) [144]
Chemical production
Chlorine and caustic soda
Sodium carbonate
Sodium chlorate
Other
Total
De-icing
Food processing
Slaughterhouses
Dairy industry
Household salt
Bakeries
Miscellaneous
Total food
Water softening
Medicine/chemical/technical use
Mineral fodder blends
Other technical industries
Total
North
America
Central and
South America
24.2
0.5
1.0
3.1
0.3
0.1
25.7
22.9
2.3
3.5
2.5
1.9
3.6
62.5
Europe
CIS
Africa and
Middle East
2.6
3.6
3.8
2.7
3.4
0
18.8
9.7
0.4
1.2
30.1
8.0
6.2
0.1
6.5
0
2.5
0.8
1.9
1.9
3.2
13.7
1.5
0.7
0.8
0.4
0.3
3.7
1.8
1.3
1.5
2.0
48.4
0.3
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
1.1
0.2
0.1
0.1
0.1
7.8
0.7
0.4
0.6
0.3
0.2
2.1
0.5
0.2
0.8
1.7
11.7
China
Other Asia
and Oceania
Total
Total
2013
25.3
21.6
0.1
0.2
47.2
0.5
20.9
3.2
0.1
1.2
25.4
1.0
98.6
41.6
1.7
2.6
144.6
32.5
111.5
48.6
2.0
2.9
164.9
34.1
7.0
2.0
1.5
2.0
4.1
43.0
2.4
1.2
1.5
0.8
0.5
26.3
9.0
7.8
9.2
15.1
244.5
2.7
1.4
1.6
0.9
0.6
31.7
10.0
8.8
9.5
17.8
276.8
7.6
0.3
0.3
1.0
0.5
57.4
Table 16 shows the development of salt production in Europe, and Table 17 lists world
production figures. Breakdown of worldwide
consumption by end-use is summarized in
Table 18.
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K S (Germany/USA)
China National Salt Industry (China)
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3.8
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Sodium Chloride
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Further Reading
G. Kreysa, M. Schutze (eds.): Corrosion Handbook, 2nd ed.,
Wiley-VCH, Weinheim 2007.